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Hong Kong university expels student who called for Wang Fuk Court fire accountability

Hong Kong university expels student who called for Wang Fuk Court fire accountability

Miles Kwan, a 24-year-old student, handing out flyers outside a train station in Hong Kong's Tai Po district on Nov 28, 2025. (Photo: AFP/Holmes Chan)

14 Feb 2026 07:50AM

HONG KONG: A Hong Kong university student who had called for accountability over a deadly fire in the city said on Friday (Feb 13) he was being expelled by the school for disciplinary offences.

Miles Kwan, a politics student, was detained for two nights by the city's national security police last year for "seditious intent" after handing out flyers calling for an independent probe into a fire that killed 168 people in November last year.

After he was released on bail, his school, the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), conducted a disciplinary review and referred the case to a student discipline committee.

The committee decided to terminate him from studies on Thursday due to "multiple acts of misconduct", according to a letter from the university obtained by AFP.

CUHK said in a statement on Friday that it would not comment on individual cases, adding that a student who is given three demerits due to disciplinary actions may be terminated from studies.

Kwan, 24, told AFP that the university did not penalise him for the arrest in November 2025.

According to Kwan, he received demerits for calling the committee a "kangaroo panel" and a "disgrace", and for being charged for "criminal damage" in 2023 after he placed stickers on lampposts in 2022 to mark the anniversary of the Tiananmen crackdown.

Kwan said he had completed his studies and was set to graduate in March.

"It is shameful of CUHK to use graduation certificates to suppress its former students," he said in a statement. "You can take away qualifications, but you can't take away dignity."

He was among several people behind a petition issued after the fire that broke out in high-rise towers of Wang Fuk Court housing estate last November, the world's deadliest residential building fire since 1980.

The petition called for government officials to be held accountable, an independent probe into possible corruption, proper resettlement for residents, and a review of construction oversight.

The Chinese city's authorities have formed a judge-led "independent committee" to investigate the fatal blaze.

Source: AFP/sn
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